Public Shaming
Even though Hero is ultimately
vindicated, her public shaming at the wedding ceremony is too terrible to be
ignored. In a sense, this kind of humiliation incurs more damage to her honor
and her family name than would an act of unchaste behavior—an transgression she
never commits. The language that both Claudio and Leonato use to shame Hero is
extremely strong. To Claudio she is a “rotten orange” (IV.i.30), and to Leonato
a rotting carcass that cannot be preserved: “the wide sea / Hath . . . / . . .
salt too little which may season give / To her foul tainted flesh!”
(IV.i.139–142).
Shame is also what Don John hopes
will cause Claudio to lose his place as Don Pedro’s favorite: once Claudio is
discovered to be engaged to a loose woman, Don John believes that Don Pedro
will reject Claudio as he rejected Don John long ago. Shame is a form of social
punishment closely connected to loss of honor. A product of an illegitimate
sexual coupling himself, Don John has grown up constantly reminded of his own
social shame, and he will do anything to right the balance. Ironically, in the
end Don John is shamed and threatened with torture to punish him for deceiving
the company. Clearly, he will never gain a good place in courtly society.
Noting
In Shakespeare’s time, the “Nothing”
of the title would have been pronounced “Noting.” Thus, the play’s title could
read: “Much Ado About Noting.” Indeed, many of the players participate in the
actions of observing, listening, and writing, or noting. In order for a plot
hinged on instances of deceit to work, the characters must note one another
constantly. When the women manipulate Beatrice into believing that Benedick
adores her, they conceal themselves in the orchard so that Beatrice can better
note their conversation. Since they know that Beatrice loves to eavesdrop, they
are sure that their plot will succeed: “look where Beatrice like a lapwing runs
/ Close by the ground to hear our conference,” notes Hero (III.i.24–25). Each
line the women speak is a carefully placed note for Beatrice to take up and
ponder; the same is true of the scheme to convince Benedick of Beatrice’s
passion.
Don John’s plot to undo Claudio also
hinges on noting: in order for Claudio to believe that Hero is unchaste and
unfaithful, he must be brought to her window to witness, or note, Margaret
(whom he takes to be Hero) bidding farewell to Borachio in the semidarkness.
Dogberry, Verges, and the rest of the comical night watch discover and arrest
Don John because, although ill-equipped to express themselves linguistically,
they overhear talk of the Margaret--Borachio staging. Despite their verbal
deficiencies, they manage to capture Don John and bring him to Leonato, after
having had the sexton (a church official) “note” the occurrences of the evening
in writing. In the end, noting, in the sense of writing, unites Beatrice and
Benedick for good: Hero and Claudio reveal love sonnets written by Beatrice and
Benedick, textual evidence that notes and proves their love for one another.
Entertainment
From the witty yet plaintive song
that Balthasar sings about the deceitfulness of men to the masked ball and the
music and dancing at the end of the play, the characters of Much Ado About
Nothing spend much of their time engaging in elaborate spectacles and
entertainments. The play’s title encapsulates the sentiment of effervescent and
light court entertainment: the two hours’ traffic onstage will be entertaining,
comic, and absorbing. The characters who merrily spar and fall in love in the
beginning will, of course, end up together in the conclusion. Beatrice compares
courtship and marriage to delightful court dances: “wooing, wedding and
repenting is as a Scotch jig, a measure, and a cinquepace” (II.i.60–61). By
including a masquerade as court entertainment in the middle, as well as two
songs and a dance at the end, the play presents itself as sheer entertainment,
conscious of its own theatricality.
Counterfeiting
The idea of counterfeiting, in the
sense of presenting a false face to the world, appears frequently throughout
the play. A particularly rich and complex example of counterfeiting occurs as
Leonato, Claudio, and Don Pedro pretend that Beatrice is head over heels in
love with Benedick so that the eavesdropping Benedick will overhear it and
believe it. Luring Benedick into this trap, Leonato ironically dismisses the
idea that perhaps Beatrice counterfeits her desire for Benedick, as he and the
others counterfeit this love themselves: “O God! Counterfeit? There was never
counterfeit of passion came so near the life of passion as she discovers it”
(II.iii.98–99).
Another, more serious reference to
counterfeiting occurs at the wedding ceremony, as Claudio rhetorically paints a
picture of Hero as a perfect counterfeit of innocence, unchaste and impure beneath
a seemingly unblemished surface:
She’s but the sign and semblance of her honour.
Behold how like a maid she blushes here!
O, what authority and show of truth
Can cunning sin cover itself withal!
(IV.i.31–34)
Behold how like a maid she blushes here!
O, what authority and show of truth
Can cunning sin cover itself withal!
(IV.i.31–34)
Hero’s supposed counterfeiting is of
a grave nature, as it threatens her womanly reputation. It is not her emotions
that are being misconstrued, as with Beatrice, but rather her character and
integrity.
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